October 25, 2001

Page 1

Thursday, October 25, 2001

Windy High 77, Low 36 www.chronicle.duke.edu Vol. 97, No. 43

The Chronicle

Wolfing ’em down The women’s soccer team shut out N.C. State 1-0 last night, marking Duke’s first ACC win of the season. See page 11

THE INDEPENDENT DAILY AT DUKE UNIVERSITY

Robbery in Blue Zone sparks student concern Police say lots remain safest on campus, urge students to take caution at all times By DAVE INGRAM The Chronicle

THAD PARSONS/THE CHRONICLE

A CAR ENTERS THE BLUE ZONE by passing through a gate; in the background, a hut designed for a security officer sits empty.

Student confidence in the safety of undergraduate parking seems to have fallen after a student was allegedly assaulted Tuesday night in the Blue Zone, but police maintain thatthe lots are already the safest on campus. The student, junior Lee Jones, reported being held up at gunpoint after getting out of his car at about 10:15 p.m. Jones was not hurt, but the suspect did take his wallet. It was the first such incident reported since the Blue Zone opened in August 2000 as the main parking area for West Campus residents, and police continue to point out the lots’ safety measures.

“I still see it as a safe lot. No lot is going to be 100 percent crime-proof,” said Maj. Robert Dean of the Duke University Police Department. “If someone has in mind to commit a crime, then they are going to. Students should always be aware of their surroundings no matter where they are. Those things should be an everyday practice; just being aware.” Dean and parking officials said they welcome suggestions on how to improve security, but said that there are currently no plans for increased measures. They noted the relatively low crime rates in the Blue Zone since they installed 10-foot fences, more lighting, video cameras and See BLUE ZONE on page 10 P-

TIFFANY WILKINS AND KIMBERLY BOONE, both students at North Carolina Central University, chat in front of Baynes dormitory.

NCCU chancellor hopes for progress � After arriving at North Carolina Central University in June, Chancellor James Ammons hopes to attract top-quality students and faculty and reach out to the community. By RUTH CARLITZ The Chronicle

With a new chancellor at its helm and its first enrollment increase in a decade, North Carolina Central University is aiming to rise into the ranks ofthe nation’s top universities. James Ammons, NCCU’s new chancellor, came to the university in June after 18 years at Florida Agricultural and Mechanical University, where he saw the school nearly triple its enrollment and become a top institution. His plans for NCCU are equally ambitious. See NCCU on page 9 !�

Inside

Des P'te the resignation of former Artist-in-Residence Philip Shabazz, the Blue Roach spoken-word series continues this year. See page 4

The Library Services Center is up and running, and users say they are pleased so far with the responsiveness to book requests. See page 4

Carrie Johnson, Duke Student Government’s vice president for community interaction, resigned from her position as head of the Young Trustee selection committee. See page 5


The Chronicle

PAGE 2 �THURSDAY, OCTOBER 25,2001

House passes large tax relief bill

The House narrowly passed tax relief legislation Wednesday that would provide a $lOO billion jolt to the economy. Democrats protested it would mainly help big companies, but President George W. Bush urged quick Senate action on the bill. •

New bill expands police powers

The House approved legislation to give police new search powers in response to last month’s terrorist attacks, including the ability to secretly search homes, tap phones and track people’s use of the Internet. •

Israeli troops continue violence in West Bank

Hours after President George W. Bush appealed for an Israeli withdrawal from Palestinian territory, Israeli troops stormed into another West Bank village killing at least five Palestinians and arresting 11 more. •

Pakistani man dies in FBI detainment

A Pakistani man arrested by the FBI in its investigation of the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks died of heart problems in his jail cell this week, authorities said Wednesday.

Bush says U.S. ‘still under attack’

Meanwhile, scientific experts expressed concern over the letter sent to Daschle ByTODDPURDUM

New York Times News Service

WASHINGTON Health officials here monitored increasing numbers of people for suspected anthrax while John Potter, the postmaster general, acknowledged Wednesday that he could not guarantee the safety of the mail. President George W. Bush warned that the nation was “still under attack.” Their statements reflected the growing sense that government officials had vastly underestimated the threat posed by the anthrax contained in a handful ofletters sent to Congress and news organizations in recent weeks. So far two postal workers in Washington have died and at least two others have been

infected. Surgeon General David Satcher sa|d that, in hindsight, “we were wrong” not to have considered that a sealed envelope containing anthrax might pose a hazard as it passed through a post office. Officials are particularly concerned about the letter sent to Sen. Tom Daschle, D-S.D. Several top scientists inside and outside the government said Wednesday that the powdery anthrax found in that letter was advanced and highly dangerous, contradicting officials who had suggested over the past week that the substance

was relatively primitive.

In particular, the scientists said it had been altered to reduce its electrostatic charge, making the spores less

Retailer cuts back on thousands of jobs

Sears, Roebuck and Co. is eliminating 4,900 salaried jobs over the next 18 months and revising its merchandise.

News briefs compiled from wire reports.

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Britain warns of long ground campaign By MICHAEL GORDON

likely to clump together and more likely to float in the air. A government official said it was now clear that the envelope sent to Daschle was porous enough, and the spores inside small enough, that germs could have leaked out even though it was taped shut. Health officials in Washington D.C. and New Jersey said they were investigating at least a dozen cases of possible inhaled anthrax, including at least one person linked to the Senate, in addition to the two confirmed cases and two deaths among postal workers here. Officials said another 20 people in the Washington area who might have been exposed

New York Times News Service

LONDON With combat in Afghanistan moving from exclusive reliance on airstrikes to more complex commando operations, Britain’s top military officer said Wednesday that ground troops might have to operate in Afghanistan for weeks at a time if they are to ferret out Osama bin Laden and destroy his terrorist network. The raids envisaged by the British commander, Adm. Michael Boyce, would be far longer and more complex than the raid carried out Friday by U.S. Special Operations forces, which were on Afghan territory for only a few hours and encountered light resistance. Boyce, a 58-year-old former submariner, is heavily involved in planning the campaign against the Taliban and bin Laden and made an unpublicized visit last week to the Pentagon and to Tampa, Fla., to meet Gen. Tommy Franks,

the head of the U.S. Central Command, who is running America’s campaign in Afghanistan. He said he talked several times a week by telephone to Gen. Richard Myers, the U.S. chief of staff, “bouncing ideas back and forth and having a good debate.” While the U.S. military has been the overwhelming force during the first phase of the conflict, the British role is more vital now that the campaign is beginning to involve ground troops. In his first comments to an American newspaper since the war against Afghanistan began with American and British bombing on Oct. 7, Boyce indicated that lengthy, potentially risky commando operations would probably be required to track down bin Laden, his main lieutenants and the Taliban leaders. “The quick pinprick operation will be valid for certain See -BRITAIN on page 6

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The Chronicle

THURSDAY, OCTOBER 25, 2001 � PAGE 3

Wireless service abuse sparks ban � Fearing misuse of the Internet, the Fuqua School of Business banned laptop use in the classroom, but the School of Law remains open to the practice. By JAMIE KLEINERMAN The Chronicle

When the University installed wireless networks in the Fuqua School of Business and the School of Law, they hoped professors and students would use the Internet to supplement academic work. But misuse of the service has forced Fuqua administrators to ban Internet access during classes, sparking debate. “We prohibit computers in the classroom,” said Doug Breeden, dean of the business school. “They are distracting, even if [the students] are working.” But the issue is far from clear cut. Noting that all law students are required to have laptops, law dean Katharine Bartlett said computers enhance note-taking. She also acknowledged the potential for Internet abuse but has not yet implemented a policy. Some students said they appreciate the ability to use the Internet whenever they want. “Before class starts, I can do a quick e-mail check,” said third-year law student Kathleen Yuergens. “It’s also helpful with administrative matters, because it allows me to respond promptly to messages.” However, the presence of the Internet can bring new distractions to students, as they can check e-mail, trade stocks and surf the World Wide Web instead of focusing on class lectures and discussion. Students admit the Internet is tempting, and they often check airline fares and the weather online in addition to reading the day’s news and visiting shopping sites. “If you look around the classroom, you see that everyone is on the Web. This makes it difficult to ask someone for their notes from a specific day,” third-year law student Ryan Vogt-Lowell wrote in an e-mail. “It’s also disrupting when someone who is on the Internet gets called on to answer a question and has no idea what is even being talked about.” Distractions like that have led critics to charge that the Internet is abused by students, and should either be banned, as done at Fuqua, or shut off through the use of “kill switches.” These switches would allow professors to shut down all Internet access while class is in session. Fuqua Assistant Professor Chad Hogan says stuSee INTERNET on page 6 &■

Found Objects Warehouse Sale October 27, 2001 9 2pm -

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MARY AKINBOBOLA/THE CHRONICLE

OFFICES AT THE SCHOOL OF NURSING are cramped, as the school, which has grown significantly over the past 10 years, searches for more space.

Duke may fix nursing space crunch Two options emerge to ease School of Nursing concerns By KEVIN LEES The Chronicle

The space crunch in the School of Nursing may soon be resolved. Executive Vice President Tallman Trask said that there are two options: either construct an addition to the nursing school or provide them with more space in Trent Drive Hall. “We are out of space,” said Mary Champagne, dean of the School of Nursing. “We’ve outgrown it and having faculty far dispersed, it makes it difficult to have a community.” The school has grown exponentially from five faculty members and 50 students ten years ago to 35 faculty members and 250 students today.

Currently, the school is spread out in a number of buildings, including the 10,000 square-foot North Campus facility that once housed the entire nursing school, as well as 4,000 more square feet of space dispersed throughout the nearby Baker House and

Hanes House Annex. Champagne said the most preferable option is an addition, especially as the nursing school plans for even more students to participate in a new second bachelor’s degree program. “A building addition is far superior,” she said. “It will allow us facilities for the programs we want.” She said that an addition would allow for better wiring and additional technology for teaching classSee NURSING on page 6


The Chronicle

pAGE 4 � THURSDAY, OCTOBER 25,2001

Despite fears, Blue Roach continues � Although many thought the spoken-word series was permanently canceled, it continues as usual this year. By MATT BRADLEY The Chronicle

Despite the resignation of the director of the Blue Roach spoken word series, which offers poetry and open-mic nights at the East Campus Coffee

House, the biweekly poetry exposition will continue. The poetry series was canceled after its director, Mary Lou Williams Center for Black Culture Artist-inResidence Philip Shabazz, left the University last year. “At the beginning of the year, there were a lot ofpeople who seemed to think that the Blue Roach had just disappeared,” said Brian Denton, assistant dean of university life and staff advisor for the Coffee House. Denton said several students who did not want to see an end to open mic opportunities at Duke formed the Phoenix Poetry Series to give students an outlet for spoken-word art. The Phoenix featured black poet, Wake Forest professor and Duke doctoral candidate Evie Shockley at the Coffee House

THE LIBRARY SERVICES CENTER, an off-site book storage facility, is located eight miles from campus at 5 Anson St

Users appreciate new library facility By KIRA ROSOFF The Chronicle

With nearly 700,000 book volumes moved from the Duke Offsite Storage Stacks to the new Library Services Center, library users report that obtaining books from the center has been easy.

“What really matters for the professors is how rapidly we receive the texts,” said Professor of History Peter Wood. “If there was some obscure collection, it might be easier to go there. The trade-off could be to put copies ofthe tables of contents in Perkins [Library]. I have found that that the delivery system has worked very well.” Wood said he appreciated the Online Public Access Catalog, a service that allows professors and students to order books online, since his office is located on East Campus in the Carr Building. Now that most volumes have been moved, officials are

in September.

See

BLUE ROACH on page 8 �

busy re-cataloging the books on the new Library Services Center system, which is based on one at Yale University. They said the process has been slow, but once they finish, they expect to provide the same 24-hour service with less paperwork

for patrons. “We are even looking into ways of photocopying old journals and having them delivered in the same way,” said Tom Wall, director of public services at Perkins. “It is functional now, but we are trying to make it more functional. My goal is to make this seamless for the library patrons.” By building the new facility, library officials hoped to plan for long-term space needs and improve the conditions for storage of the older volumes by decreasing temperature and humidity. Wall said the stacks are 45 feet tall, so that the 23,000 square-foot site may be optimized in consideration of size and depth, rather than by subject. See LIBRARY on page

10 �

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The Chronicle

THURSDAY.

OCTOBER 25. 2001 � PAGE 5

Johnson steps down from Young Trustee committee By ALEX GARINGER The Chronicle

Let the race for Young Trustee begin, At last night’s Duke Student Government meeting, Vice President for Community Interaction Carrie Johnson threw her hat into the ring for the undergraduate spot on the Board of Trustees.

Johnson’s announcement is the first of the race, which usually attracts more than 10 initial candidates. Johnson resigned as chair of the Young Trustee Nominating Committee, one of the major responsibilities of her vice presidency. The YTNC is part of the Intercommunity Council, a group of student leaders that includes DSG officials, the editor of The Chronicle and presidents and chairs of other student organizations. teach January, the YTNC narrows down the candidates for the Young Trustee position to three. The DSG legislature then selects the Young Trustee through a final vote in January. The Young Trustee serves a three-year term, gaining voting privileges in the second year of service. Johnson said she will remain a member of the ICC. “I’ll still be working with the ICC and [DSG President] C.J. [Walsh],” Johnson said. The senior was DSG co-coordinator of student leadership last year, and has served in various leadership positions outside of DSG, including in the Women’s Studies Dormitory and Students for Choice. Walsh also nominated himself Wednesday as Johnson’s replacement as

chair of the nominating committee, thereby eliminating himself as a potential candidate for the position. “I ran for [DSG president] to improve this organization,” Walsh told legislators, “not to pat myself on the back. I want to be a normal person after I graduate.” Walsh’s predecessor, Jordan Bazinsky, won last year’s Young Trustee election. In an e-mail sent to DSG legislators Tuesday night, Walsh explained that under DSG bylaw he is charged with appointing another elected member of the Cabinet to chair the selection process. Walsh said his decision to chair the selection committee himself was one made by process-of-elimination. Walsh said Executive Vice President Drew Ensign also has expressed interest in running for Young Trustee and

would thus be ineligible. Ensign confirmed that he is considering running but has not made a final decision. Vice President for Academic Affairs Abhijit Prabhu declined the chair position due to his academic load. Walsh said he also felt it would be inappropriate for Vice President for Student Affairs Joshua Jean-Baptiste and Vice

President for Facilities and Athletics Matthew Slovik to chair the committee because both are not seniors. IN OTHER BUSINESS: DSG legislators voted unanimously to increase the DSG portion of the student activity fee by $2 to $72 a year. The increase is intended to adjust for the University-wide standard 3 percent inflation rate.

CRAIG BYRNES/THE CHRONICLE

CARRIE JOHNSON, Duke Student Government’s vice president for community interaction, plans to run for the Young Trustee position.


The Chronicle

PAGE 6 � THURSDAY, OCTOBER 25.2001

Nursing Students report Internet misuse in class officials cite space limits � NURSING from page 3 es. Furthermore, she said that because the nursing school will always be a modest-sized school, with a small

faculty, it is important for them to be united in one building. The school has been involved in a

number of planning stages to assess office, student and research needs. She hoped that the nursing school would be able to present a recommendation to Medical Center administrators by mid-November. Marcia Loriraer, an assistant clinical professor, said that space concerns have plagued the school for at least the past two years. “We are tripping all over each other. It’s hard to think,” said Lorimer, who teaches in one building and has an office in another. She added that technical issues are another problem at the school. “Just having to have the technical staff set it up, there’s only a certain number of them,” Lorimer said. “They can’t be everywhere at once. [When] you have to find them, class gets delayed,” she added. Champagne said she had toured new facilities at a number ofother universities, including Emory University and the Johns Hopkins University. Mary O’Rourke, director of admissions and student services at Johns Hopkins’ nursing school, said a new building, opened in 1998, has unified that school and has made it more attractive to both incoming faculty and to students. “I think that for me, from a marketing perspective, it certainly was a lot easier to promote this school with a brand new building like that,” she said. “We had been scattered throughout the university before then.”

� INTERNET from page 3 dents do not use the Internet, despite its availability in classrooms. “All the classrooms in Fuqua, I understand, are now set up for wireless Internet access. However, in the Daytime MBA Program, students are typically discouraged from using these facilities during class time,” Hogan wrote in an e-mail. Many professors and students say that banning Internet use does not ad-

dress the whole problem. They feel that the presence of laptop computers itself provides just as much distraction as the Internet. “I’ve seen people playing Free Cell, Solitaire or Pac-Man in class,” said third-year law student Amy Carper. “What it comes down to is the individual students’ beliefs and discipline, and whether they allow themselves to be distracted.” Some professors say the introduc-

tion of computers and Internet access into classrooms merely renews the challenges to win over and hold students’ attention. “All that’s changed is the form of distraction,” said Tom Metzloff, professor of law. “Students used to read newspapers, do crossword puzzles or fall asleep in class,” he said. ‘What remains is the challenge to engage students with the material and be an effective teacher.”

U.K. needs complex raids to get bin Laden � BRITAIN from page 2 Service —elite British commandos that are roughly parallel to the U.S. Delta targets where you have really good intelligence,” Boyce said. “Sometimes one force and Navy Seals. The planners stress that no final demight have to stay longer to achieve a proper reconnaissance of the area you cision has been made, but say other troops that could be involved in heavier are looking at.” assaults include British Army para“It is conceivable that we could conduct an operation for a period of days troopers and Royal Marines of 3 Comand, perhaps, conceivably even weeks,” mando Brigade. They are specially trained in mountain and winter warhe added. British forces have been involved in fare, an important qualification as winthe conflict since it began 18 days ago, ter approaches in Afghanistan. While British politicians decide what with British submarines firing cruise missiles into Afghanistan on the first to do, the British military is expected to night ofthe war. British aerial refueling keep the Illustrious, an aircraft carrier, tankers have serviced US. Navy jets, on station in the Arabian Sea. The Illustrious has been participating in an exerand British planes have flown reconcise involving some 20,000 British troops naissance missions. in nearby Oman and could serve as a poStill, the air campaign has been dominated by the American military, which tential platform for special operations has drawn on its high-tech arsenal to troops and helicopters, playing much the same role as the U.S. aircraft carrier carry out precision strikes. Kitty Hawk. Now, the British can deploy their comBoyce said Britain was also considermandos, who are among the most highly ing contributing attack planes if it could regarded in the world. Troops and commanders can draw on their experience of find a nation where they could be based. Boyce said commandos could be used battling guerrillas in Northern Ireland, hunting down war crimes suspects in very differently in Afghanistan dependBosnia and operations in nations like ing on the weather conditions, the threat Sierra Leone, where British troops last on the ground and intelligence—particuyear staged a daring dawn attack on the larly about bin Laden and other leaders ofhis al-Qaida network and their Taliban jungle base of renegade guerrillas to rescue seven British soldiers held hostage. protectors. British military planners say the “A quick operation would be good for troops they are considering deploying certain targets,” he said. “It may be an for the war against Afghanistan include important intelligence hit. It may be an the Special Air Service and Special Boat al-Qaida senior person to be lifted.” But

there may also be situations in which commandos need to carry out a more extensive search. “You may have an idea that there is something in that particular small area you are looking at, but you are not actually sure exactly where it is until you go and find it,” he said. One potential target, he said, is not only the al-Qaida and Taliban leadership, but stashes of opium and heroin, which the Taliban have been accused of selling to raise money to buy arms. “If you knew where a drug cache is, taking that down would be very useful thing,” he said. “It is something we are looking for very hard and would be happy to do something about.” Boyce acknowledged that the military was under enormous pressure from political leaders to defeat the Taliban and alQaida swiftly. But the Taliban, he said, are digging in, making the war a longterm test of wills. Military leaders, the admiral suggested, therefore must send two messages. They heed to show the Taliban that they cannot outlast the American-led coalition. This is done by maintaining steady military pressure through bombing and commando raids. Second, military leaders must persuade Western politicians and pundits that fighting terrorism may be less of a blitzkrieg than a grinding war of attrition, a war that Boyce has already cautioned may last through the summer and even beyond.

DULSA* BOOK DRIVE FOR DURHAM PUBLIC SCHOOLS WATTS ELEMENTARY EARLY READERS

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The Chronicle

THURSDAY, OCTOBER 25,2001 � PAGE 7

Number of Anthrax cases continues to rise across the nation ANTHRAX from page 2

to anthrax were being monitored, with “low suspicion” that their ailments were anthrax-related. But as a precaution, health officials expanded their recommendation for immediate antibiotic treatment to include all workers in 120 institutions that receive bulk mail, including the Library of Congress. The decisions was based on concern that such mail might have been contaminated at the district’s main processing center on Brentwood Road, which handled the Daschle letter. One other suspected anthrax case was reported in New York. Mayor Rudolph Giuliani said a second employee ofthe New York Post had probably contracted an anthrax infection of the skin. It was another unsettling day as the government’s top officials grappled with an insidious and invisible enemy. Despite a sprawling and active investigation, law enforcement officials said they now believed additional anthrax attacks were a certainty. Addressing the U.S. Conference of Mayors, the FBI director, Robert Mueller, said the anthrax attacks “were clearly meant to terrorize a country already on the edge.” Bush, in remarks at a Maryland printing plant to promote his economic stimulus package, repeated that he had no direct evidence connecting anthrax to the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks, but said, “There are some links.” “Both series of actions are motivated by evil and hate,” Bush said. “Both series of actions are meant to disrupt Americans’ way of life. Both series of actions are an attack on our homeland. And both series of actions will not stand.” In all, six people nationwide have been diagnosed with inhalation anthrax this month, including the four

postal workers in Washington D.C. and two employees at an 11-year-old boy were admitted Tuesday to ChilAmerican Media in Boca Raton, Fla. One of those in dren’s National Medical Center in Washington with Florida, Robert Stevens, a photo editor, died Oct. 5, but “possible exposure to anthrax,” and were in good condition, the hospital said. But it would provide no the other, Ernesto Blanco, 73, a mailroom worker, was released from the hospital late Tuesday, officials said further details on their cases or how they might have Wednesday. been exposed. With the demand for antibiotics growing, Tommy A total of seven people, most of them employees of New York news outlets, have contracted the less Thompson, secretary of health and human services, threatening form of skin anthrax and are responding announced an agreement with Bayer to buy 100 milto treatment or cured. lion doses of its patented Cipro at the sharply reThough hundreds of workers have been tested, ofduced price of 95 cents each. In a round of morning television appearances, ficials here and in New Jersey reported no new confirmed cases of either form ofthe disease Wednesday, Potter, the nation’s top postal official, said that risks but they offered new details on several patients hosfrom opening the mail were slim, but acknowledged that its safety could not be guaranteed. pitalized with suspicious, flu-like symptoms. Most were postal workers, but at least one was “The chances are very, very slim, but, again, people connected to the Senate, according to Holy Cross should do things that are safe, and when they handle Hospital in Silver Spring, Md. A 2-year-old girl and mail, they should wash their hands,” Potter said.

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The Terry Sanford Distinguished Lecture was endowed by a gift to the university from the William R. Kenan Jr. Charitable Trust in honor of the late Terry Sanford, who served as North Carolina Governor and U.S. Senator, and as Duke’s President for 16 years. Sanford also was founder of the Institute that now bears his name.

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Senator Lieberman was first elected to the U.S. Senate in 1988. He is a nationally recognized leader of the Democratic Party and of numerous bipartisan initiatives. In 2000, he was Democratic candidatefor Vice President, becoming thefirst Jewish-American to be nominatedfor national office.

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The event is free and open to the public. Geneen Auditorium is located in Duke’s Fuqua School ofBusiness, which is on Science Drive on West Campus. Parking is available off N.C. 751 and Science Drive, in lots adjacent to Fuqua. More information: www.pubpol.duke.edu


The Chronicle

pAGE 8 � THURSDAY, OCTOBER 25, 2001

Student takes over organization of Blue Roach

� BLUE ROACH from page 4 But the Blue Roach is back. Under the unofficial direction of junior Frankye Riley, the show will feature spoken-word art on alternating Thursday nights, beginning tonight. “We’re working in collaboration with a lot of different people,” said Riley. “We’re working with Mi Gente, and a new group called Students for Economic Justice.” Riley said she hopes to run theme poetry nights based on the groups with whom she is working. Currently, the Blue Roach is not chartered under Duke Student Government, but Riley said she hopes it will be recognized as a student organization before the end of the year. Each event features a professional poet or spokenword artist, and is followed by an open-mic session where audience members are given the opportunity to present their work on stage. “Some people sing, other people do poetry, some people just want to say something, some people freestyle,” said Riley. “It just depends on who is in the audience and who wants to try something that night.” The group hopes to continue growing despite the absence of Shabazz. Riley said Shabazz, a regionally recognized black poet, concentrated on artistic programming for the Mary Lou Williams Center. Neither Riley nor Mary Lou Williams Center Director Leon Dunkley knew with certainty Shabazz’s reasons for leaving Duke, and Shabazz could not be reached for comment.

THE EAST CAMPUS COFFEE HOUSE serves as the home of the Blue Roach spoken-word series,

International Delights owner explains ketchup policy � LUBBAD from page 1 “The embassy said we would be taken care of before we came here,” Lubbad said. “They gave us $1,200 and put us up for two nights in the Holiday Inn. After that, we were pretty much on our own.” He said North Carolina officials found an apartment for his family and paid the $5lO rent for three months. After that period expired, Lubbad and his family could no longer afford to live there and sub-

sequently moved. Lubbad began to work for the North Carolina Department of Revenue, but said he was forced to sell fruit by the roadside in order to support his family. It took them several years to adjust to their new life in America, Lubbad said; learning English was

the most difficult part. “I had to work when we first got here because we needed the money,” said Lubbad’s wife, Zakie Moukanna. “When we finally got some money, I signed up for classes because I needed to be able to communicate.”

After a few years in America, Moukanna had the idea to make Mediterranean food. That sparked her husband’s idea to begin International Delights, a well-established local eatery. They chose the Ninth Street location because it was close to the University and Duke Hospital. “We knew the people here at Duke were good people, and that they knew and loved... the food we were going to make,” Lubbad said. Now, Lubbad is well-known throughout the Duke community for his restaurant, and his policies, such as prohibition of ketchup, have made customers talk. “They get ketchup only for fries,” Lubbad explained. “I do not let them use ketchup for my food. You use ketchup to cover up the taste of bad food like a hamburger from McDonalds. You don’t use ketchup on good food that you get at my restaurant.” Lubbad has large signs posted, featuring a ketchup bottle with a line through it and the words,

‘No ketchup.’ “I make my food like we make it at home,” he said.

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“It’s not Subway. I season it with all the garlic and salt and pepper that it needs. It doesn’t need anymore than what I put in.” Lubbad said he purposefully does not place salt and pepper shakers on tables in the restaurant. Refusing to eat out, he said he knows the importance of good food and a good atmosphere. “It’s impossible to find people who make food at a restaurant like they do at home,” he said. “Some jyst care about business, and so they make junk feoehorb Lubbad also prides himself on his superior level of customer service. “I deal with customers like they are family. When they eat with us, it’s like they are eating at our home,” he said. Moukanna said her husband takes that atmosphere very seriously. “When we were living in Kuwait, we would never go out to eat at a restaurant, and there [werel only specific houses where he would eat where he knew the wife, the cook,” she said.


The Chronicle

THURSDAY, OCTOBER 25,2001 � PAGE 9

Ammons hopes to continue trend of higher enrollment NCCU from page 1 The key elements of this plan, Ammons said, are attracting high-caliber students, reaching oiit to corporate America, recruiting outstanding faculty and connecting with the community. “We are developing a vision and a strategic plan to position NCCU to be one of the leading universities in the country,” he said, adding that the university is already seeing benefits from these plans. In their attempt to build corporate links, NCCU will host an industry summit today, bringing between 65 and 70 corporations such as Oracle, IBM and Xerox to campus as a jumping-offpoint for relationships that Ammons said he hopes can provide scholarships, internships, technical assistance and equipment and bring distinguished lecturers to the campus. “Corporations that need a highly talented workforce and also need diversity are looking for places where they can recruit top talent to help diversify &

their workforces,” Ammons said. Red Hat Executive Vice President Mark Webbink, who is co-chairing the summit with Red Hat President and CEO Matthew Szulik, said he was enthusiastic that NCCU would definitely be a place that Red Hat could look to recruit employees, especially as the university is currently working to advance

and student caliber cannot simultaneously increase is a misconception. “When people talk about providing access, they think that what you’re going to do is lower quality,” Ammons said. “That’s not what we’re going to do.” The emphasis on enrollment and retention resonates, as declines in enrollment throughout the 1990s led to a $956,000 budget shortfall that Ammons said will be felt primarily in the areas ofteaching, research and service. The university did receive $l2l million in state bond money for construction and renovation, primarily of residence halls. In order to further NCCU’s prestige, Ammons is also concentrating on recruiting top professors and expanding the university’s stronger programs. A

iiversity@chronide.duke.edu

dn

TheDeWitt Wallace Center for Communications and Journalism

technology programs. The industry summit ties in with another of Ammons’ goals, attracting top students. He said he aims to put together scholarship packages that will include extra incentives like internships and laptop

computers. Along with raising the caliber of the student body, Ammons said he hopes to continue this year’s trend of increased enrollment and begin working on student retention. Director of Undergraduate Admissions Jocelyn Foy enumerated a variety of reasons behind this year’s increase of 274 students. NCCU employed aggressive marketing strategies, worked with alumni, targeted high-achieving students and offered more

number of endowed chairs are currently vacant, and the corporate relationship that Ammons hopes to establish can help put in place attractive salary packages and benefits, he said. One ofthe programs he hopes to expand is that of biomedical science. For example, he wants the curriculum to include genomics and viral informatics. The Julius L. Chambers Biomedical/Biotechnology Research Institute is currently conducting research in those areas and will continue to work with students interested in biomedical science, said Dr. Ken Harewood, the institute’s director, “We are complementing and supplementing the experience that they get in the classroom and better preparing them for their careers,” Harewood said.

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scholarships.

Although no specific eligibility requirements are yet planned, Foy said she expects some such changes under Ammons’ administration. Ammons said he plans to put into place an admissions profile that will take into consideration class rank, test scores, courses, socioeconomic factors

and grade point average. “[The profile] in some instances will include students who other universities wouldn’t take a chance on, but we are,” he said. Ammons and Foy said the idea that enrollment

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The Chronicle

p AGE 10 � THURSDAY, OCTOBER 25, 2001

DSG plans to address parking safety New facility

fills several requests daily

� BLUE ZONE from page 1

entrance gates. In addition, an SUV with a green search light regularly patrols the Blue Zone and other parking areas. Although cameras cover the area where the student said he was assaulted, Dean said that nothing showed up on the camera. Some students, including Jones, suggested that more could be done to improve security. He said the incident may have been prevented with better lighting or fewer trees around. “The police handled it really well, but just overall, the safety of the parking lot isn’t where it should be right now” Jones said. “I think it’s kind of a good thing that

this happened, so they can make some changes. It could have been a lot worse.” Police do not yet have any suspects in the case, but Wednesday they did release more details about the person for whom they are searching. Jones described him as a 180-lb., 6’ black man wearing blue jeans and a dark-colored, hooded sweatshirt. The man allegedly approached him, asking, “Hey man what you got?” and pointing what Jones thought to be a silver-colored handgun, possibly 9 mm. Jones gave the man his wallet, containing $3O cash and credit and identification cards. The man then ran into the wooded area toward Duke University

Road. PoUce searched for the suspect but did not find him. “It seems that up until now, given the low crime rate, that the security measures in the Blue Zone have been adequate. But an incident as severe as this raises questions in my mind,” said sophomore Matthew Slovik, Duke Student Government vice president for facilities and athletics.

>

LIBRARY from page 4 Although the off-site stacks are not

browsable, the new center successfully fills between 30 and 40 requests each day, said Maurice Parker, the center’s assistant manager. Most undergraduates said they did

not know about the off-site service, but

graduate students and professors reported using it frequently. “I used it once last year,” said undergraduate Dorian Nicole Haynes. “The only reason I know about it is because last year I had to learn about the library resources for a writing class. The librarian did it for me, so I never knew where [the articles] actually came from.” Although the service is open to all students, Graduate and Student Professional Council President Elayne Heisler, a student in sociology, found it to be very department-based. “I have not used them,” she said, “but I am in the sociology department. The sciences and social sciences have less use [for the off-site volumes] because they usually require more re-

PRATIK PATEL/THE CHRONICLE

A 10-FOOTFENCE surrounds portions of the Blue Zone parking area, where most undergraduate students park their cars. Slovik said his DSG committee will Other undergraduates, such as junior address the issue at its meeting next Keith Grawert, said more patrolling may week, and that one possible solution is be a solution. “Maybe ifthey just had unithe return of a program like SafeKarts, formed police walking ‘the beat’ so you which for a short time last year shuttled had some visible presence,” he said, students between West Campus and the adding that he has seen the driver ofthe security SUV idle, reading a magazine. Blue Zone via golf carts. Some students said such changes may The Blue Zone also has a small hut at make the lots safer, but that the assault its entrance, originally designed as a stahas changed their perception of parking tion for police officers. It was not used there. “I would always be scared walking after officials decided the SUV was more in the Blue Zone alone, but now this has effective, said Joe Pietrantoni, associate happened, I would be even more relucvice president for auxiliary services, tant to go there without Mends,” said adding that a decision is still being made on the hut. junior Ashley DTJva.

DON’T MISS THE

WITH KEYNOTE ADDRESS BY

DR. BRUCE AMES “THE CAUSES AND PREVENTION OF CANCER”

2

Marianne Wardle, a graduate student in art and art history and GPSC representative to the library, said she makes use of the service. “I use them all the time,” she said, “but only for research purposes. I have no other use for those resotft,(tea! ,w 981J£39d

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Sports

Vanderbilt quarterback Greg Zolman *

looks for his team’s second win Saturday at Duke. See page 12

� Gridiron Notes brings you up to date on the exciting world of ACC football. See page 14 The Chronicle � page 11

SDAY, OCTOBER 25, 2001

Fuller scores lone goal as women’s soccer beats ’Pack By NICK CHRISTIE The Chronicle

RALEIGH In a battle between two ACC rivals, Duke ended its fivegame conference losing streak last night with a hard fought 1-0 victory over N.C. State at the WRAL Soccer Complex. Despite controlling the flow of the game, the Blue Devils (6-8, 1-5 in the ACC) squandered a bevy of second-half opportunities to seize a comfortable lead, and were forced to sweat out late scoring threats from the

Wolfpack (7-7, 0-5). “Any ACC win is a quality win,” Duke coach Robbie Church said. “It was not the prettiest game you have ever seen, but you just have to roll your sleeves up.” Junior midfielder Carly Fuller scored the Blue Devils’ lone goal in the contest’s 18th minute. Her superbly struck free kick taken from 30 yards out first cleared a wall of Wolfpack defenders and then dipped under the cross bar to find the net’s left corner. “I was really excited,” Fuller said. “I stepped back, and it was just a great hit. Right when I hit it, I was like Tes!’” Duke goalkeeper Thora Helgadottir preserved the lead with several brilliant saves. Although passively watching her team play in N.C. State’s half ofthe field for much ofthe contest, Helgadottir occasionally came under heavy pressure. In the 34th minute, she sprawled to deny the Wolfpack’s Adrienne Barnes from point-blank range, thereby allowing Duke to retain its advantage. :i “These games aren’t any easier for the goalkeeper, just because we have control of the game,” Helgadottir ,

said. “We are always afraid of losing focus.” After seeing his team rely on Helgadottir’s sterling performance so as not to relinquish its slim margin, Church expressed frustration at his squad’s inability to finish off opposing teams.

DREW KLEIN/THE CHRONICLE

THORA HELGADOTTIR stuffs a Wolfpack player Wednesday night. The Iceland native made 11 saves in shutting out N.C. State. “We had control most ofthe game, but we can’t put anybody away,” he said. “We could not get the second goal. That’s what we talked about at halftime, but we could not get the second goal.” Last year, Duke’s inability to finish off the Wolfpack resulted in a bitter 2-1 defeat. N.C. State scored two goals in the final 15 minutes, stunning the Blue Devils, Consequently, as Wednesday’s game wore on, the Blue Devil players felt an acute sensation of deja vu. “Sitting on the sidelines I was really anxious,” soph-

omore midfielder Gwendolyn Oxenham said. “It was definitely nerve racking.”

However, desperately needing to win in order to keep alive their hopes at receiving a postseason birth, the Blue Devils responded to the tense situation, “We all came out and knew that this was pretty much make it or break it,” Fuller said. “If we don’t win today, we are done. They were in the same position we were, so we had to battle.” See

WOMEN’S SOCCER on page 16 �

Blue Devil since birth is the third article in a six-part series that introduces the members of the men’s basketball recruiting class 0f2002. Even Hunter S. Thompson wouldn’t bet against Lee Melchionni. By birth Lee into a family with innumerable His father Gary, now the presiDuke Alumni Association, had .etball for the Blue Devils in the Js and has since earned a great professional success. His mother ;ly possessed of only the most c brand of maternal compassion, son as many opportunities to thrive ibly could. ;e, Lee will play basketball at jring yet another family that is urture him toward the success he -ied for. can’t wait to go to school there next year,” Melchionni said. “I love Duke basketball and I love Duke as a university. I just want to take advantage of my opportunities on the court and in class too.” Though he will officially enroll at Duke next

T

Field hockey falls in OT The field hockey team lost in overtime 3-2 to Wake Forest last night at Williams Field. The Chronicle will have a full recap of the game in tomorrow’s edition.

Free hoops preview

JBSaf Men’s basketball coach

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Mike Krzyzewski announced that the team’s practice in Cameron Indoor Stadium Friday from 4to 7 p.m. will be free and open to the public.

tGone-zaiez

The Cleveland Indians decided to not exercise the $l4 million option on outfielder Juan Gonzalez for next season. Gonzalez hit .325 last season with 35 home runs and 140 RBI.

fall, Melchionni’s progression into the student body could not have been more natural. From the time he interrupted the oldtimers’ game as a six-year-old by darting across Cameron’s hardwood toward the

unsuspecting Blue Devil mascot, to his skipping out on a family dinner to watch the end of Duke’s Final Four contest against UNLV in 1991, to the time he verbally committed to attend the University, Lee has always been a Blue Devil. “Ever since he has decided to go to Duke, he has sprouted wings,” Karen said. “It is a dream come true for him. He can’t wait to become full with all of the wonderful stuff Coach K can give him.” He will, however, only possess the opportunity in practice to apply all ofKrzyzewski’s wisdom next year since Duke basketball has decided to redshirt Lee.

As a basketball player whose talent has

Tommy’s in trouble FILA is suing Michigan basketball coach Tommy Amaker tor breach of contract. While at Seton Hall, Amaker was under contract to endorse FILA, but is now at Michigan, a Nike school.

See

fIH H

H

MELCffIONNI on page 16 �

National Hockey League Red Wings 4, Oilers 1 Penguins 3, Stars 2 Capitals 4, Panthers 3 (OT) Hurricanes 7, Wild 3 Mighty Ducks 3, Coyotes 2


Sports

PAGE 12 �THURSDAY. OCTOBER 25. 2001

The Chronicle

Zolman ready to lead attac against Duke Vanderbilt's quarterback has dangerous wide receivers in Garrett and Strieker By Kevin Lloyd The Chronicle

This

Saturday the Duke Blue Devils (0-7, 0-4) square off against the Vanderbilt Commodores (1-5) at Wallace Wade Stadium in what has been referred to by the national press as “the worst thing ever.” While the media scoffs at a matchup of arguably the two worst teams in major conference football, this is a huge game for both teams. After Vanderbilt, the Blue Devils have N.C. State, UNC and Clemson left on the schedule. Duke would hardly be favored in any of those contests. If the Blue Devils want to prevent a winless season, they are going to have to stop Vanderbilt quarterback Greg Zolman. The fifth-year senior quarterback has led the Commodores to a very respectable No. 5 ranking in Southeastern Conference passing offense. “Our quarterback position is the best that it has ever been since I have been here,” Vanderbilt coach Woody Widenhofer said. This season Zolman surpassed Whit Taylor as the team’s all-time leader in passing yardage. His career total now stands at 6,736 yards. Against Duke this week, Zolman can also become Vanderbilt’s career leader in passing attempts, as he needs only eight to surpass another of Taylor’s records. Despite the Commodore’s unimpressive record,

much of the season, a Zolman has p. :d performance against the Georgia In addition to being a threat to put up big However, he arrives fresh off his worst hers, Zolman generally does a good job of ho. outing of the year. Zolman had a outing last weekend in onto possession of the football. In the five games, Columbia, S.C., as the Commodores suffered a 46-14 before South Carolina, he had thrown only one schlacking against the South Carolina Gamecocks. interception, compared to six touchdowns. “I thought we took a step backwards,” Zolman has the advantage of having two potenWidenhofer said of the loss. “We went down there tial playmakers at the wide receiver position. M.J. and played a very, very good football team in South Garrett put up Vanderbilt’s season-leading receivCarolina.... Coming off a tough opening and we ing performance, with a eight-catch, 208-yard day fought hard to get back into it, a 19-14 game, and against Middle Tennessee State in the opener. Dan the momentum shift should have picked us up and Strieker had 137 yards receiving against Georgia. we should have gone on to play them tough to the The Commodores bring more talent than expectend. But we didn’t do that. That bothers me.” ed from a 1-5 team, and they will be very focused Zolman didn’t do much to keep the Commodores heading into Saturday, in the game. He completed 7-of-20 passing attempts “Duke is a team that will do anything to win,” for only 126 yards. Moreover, he threw two intercepWidenhofer said. “I am sure of that. They haven’t tions to only one touchdown pass. won a game in a long time. I do know that we have “I think a quarterback is going to have a night to get a lot better this week to go down there and like that every once in a while,” Widenhofer said. beat Duke.” “Unfortunately when they got ahead by a couple of In order to shut down Zolman, the Blue Devils’ touchdowns, he probably took it upon himself to best chance may be to get to him before he throws make things happen. And that’s what you can’t do. the ball. The Commodores have allowed an SEC low You probably have to play within yourself and live three sacks, but this week they will be playing withto play another day.” out fifth-year senior offensive guard Duncan Cave, Despite the South Carolina performance, Zolman who fractured his left ankle against South Carolina. remains a danger to the Blue Devil defense. He has The changes in the line may leave Vanderbilt’s best thrown for over 300 yards twice this season, including hope flat on his back. '

Interested in Working in tke Nonpro fit Sector? Get Connected at tke Nonprofit Career Forum! Thursday, November Ist Bryan Center Von Canons -

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The Chronicle

Sports

THURSDAY. OCTOBER 25. 2001 �PAGE 13

Flutie versus Johnson takes center stage in San Diego By BERNIE WILSON

Doug Flutie, I mean, he’s like a rock star who plays football,” Wiley said. “He’s that adored.” SAN DIEGO As soap operas go, it could have Flutie, who turned 39 on Tuesday, has been a big been called “All My Quarterbacks.” part of the Chargers’ turnaround from an embarThe Buffalo Bills simply thought it made sense rassing 1-15 last year to 4-2 this year. The to have two good QBs in Rob Johnson and Doug ing Bills are 1-4, their worst start in 15 rebuildyears. Flutie. If one got hurt, the team would still be in Flutie was 21-9 when he started for the Bills. good shape with the other. “We won more games with Doug,” Wiley said. Johnson got hurt, Flutie got a chance and three “Doug had more support. If you had to take a vote, seasons of feuding followed. There were two sets of without a Florida recount, Doug’s going to win that hands and only one football. one. It’s not because of who’s taller, who’s older. All “It was just weird, man,” said defensive end those things are secondary to who won more games.” Marcellus Wiley, who like Flutie and other former John Butler, the general manager who brought Bills players and executives joined a great westboth QBs to Buffalo in 1998, is now San Diego’s GM. ward migration in the offseason and signed with “All you really think about is having the two the San Diego Chargers. best players possible,” Butler said. “In case some“It was totally The Young and the Restless,’” thing happened to one, boy, you still have a chance Wiley said. “Just being in the locker room and sayto still be a good football team. I didn’t realize until ing, What’s going on today?”’ I left how much of a split it was. I was looking at The QB controversy officially ended Feb. 28 what was best for the football team.” when the Bills settled on Johnson, a beach bum When Johnson suffered a rib injury in 1998, from Southern California, and got rid of Flutie, Flutie replaced him and turned the Bills around with who had revived his career after an eight-year an effort that earned him a spot in the Pro Bowl. exile in the Canadian Football League. The following season, Flutie started the first 15 But Johnson vs. Flutie is not over. The Bills play games and led the Bills to the playoffs. With the the Chargers Sunday in San Diego, and their berth secure, coach Wade Phillips started Johnson showdown is the juiciest of several subplots. in Week 16. Johnson had a big game against Both quarterbacks are downplaying the Indianapolis and wound up usurping Flutie for the matchup and what went on in the past. Still, wild-card game against Tennessee, which the Johnson managed to get in a zinger. Titans won with the Music City Miracle. “I don’t have to face him. He’s not playing Things got worse in the middle of last season. defense. Some of his fans probably think he can Flutie replaced the injured Johnson in overtime play defense, but no,” Johnson said. against San Diego, and led the Bills to a win. He Johnson won the Bills’ job, but he’s not necesstarted the next four games, winning three. When sarily the most popular QB in Buffalo. Although Johnson returned, he was the starter. he’s only 5-foot-10 and now plays 3,000 miles away, “Both of us were competing for a job,” Flutie Flutie casts a long shadow. said. “We got along in meetings; we sat in meetings Flutie’s jerseys are still abundant at Bills home every day. It was a business relationship more than games. Buffalo-area newspapers publish weekly a friendship. We weren’t best of friends, but it wascomparisons, charting the two quarterbacks’ stan’t this hatred that everyone’s made it out to be. tistics. The CBS affiliates in Rochester and Buffalo “Steve Young and Joe Montana, I guess, went show Chargers games. through the same thing, two guys trying to fight “When you have someone of that »rtion, for a job.” The Associated Press

VERN VERNA/AI WIRE

while .looking for an open receiver. Flutie will face theBills,'-his former team, Sunday in San Diego.


p AGE

Sports

14 �THURSDAY. OCTOBER 25. 2001

Through Today

Overall

North Carolina

4-1

5-3

Clemson

2-2

4-2

P. Rivers, N.C. State

131/213 1477

3-4

W. Dantzler, Clemson

112/173 1272

2-3

PASSING YARDS Comp/Att Yds

3-3

Wake Forest

“Have faith in yourselves, have faith in your coaches, go out and play a football game. That's what it's all about.”

� Douglas streak continues 9

ACC

Virginia

The Chronicle

Duke sophomore tailback Chris Douglas had 173 all-purpose yards against Maryland last week, extending his streak of having 100 or more yards to 10 straight games. His 183.7 all-purpose yards per game ranks him fifth nationally. Douglas had many opportunities to return kicks against Maryland, as the Terps scored eight touchdowns,

Maryland coach Ralph Friedgen

ON WHAT HE’LL TELL HIS PLAYERS PRIOR to his game against Florida State

� Yellow Jackets Manget sets record 9

Last week in review Saturday, Oct. 20 Maryland 59, Duke 17 North Carolina 38, Clemson 3 Georgia Tech 27, N.C. State 17 Florida State 43, Virginia 7

This week’s schedule Saturday, Oct. 29 Vanderbilt @ Duke, 1 p.m. Clemson @ Wake Forest, noon Virginia @ N.C. State, 1:30 p.m. No. 10 Maryland @ No. 19 FSU, 3 p.m

RUSHING YARDS Att. Yds

TD

T. Williams, Wake

150

654

5

J. Bums, Ga Tech

158

629

8

RECEIVING YARDS Rec. Yds

TD

572

2

31

339

1

SCORING LEADERS Pos. Pts.

Duke coach Carl Franks on Saturday's game against the Commodores

� ACC Game of the Week

K. Campbell, Ga Tech 42 D. Hamilton, Clem

“This could be one heck of a football game. I guarantee that Vanderbilt feels the exact same way, and there's no reason they shouldn't.”

Luke Manget, GeorgiaTech’s place kicker, kicked his 118th consecutive extra point, setting an ACC record. Manget is the conference’s leading scorer with 53 points—27 extra points, 12 field goals. He did struggle against N.C. State, however, going 2-of-7 on field goal attempts, including a blocked kick in the Yellow Jackets’ 27-17 win over the Wolfpack. Tenth-ranked Maryland goes to Tallahassee looking to beat the 19th-rankedFlorida State Seminoles for the first time in 12 tries. Florida State has outscored the Terrapins 459 to 122 over the past 9 meetings since joining the ACC in 1992. With a win, FSU head coach Bobby Bowden can move into third-place in NCAA career coaching victories, Bowden’s 318 tie him for third with "Pop" Warner.

“It's amazing how [the ACC race] has gone.... Our backs are against the wall in the ACC race. Maryland is in the driver’s seat.” Florida State coach Bobby Bowden ON THE ACC CHAMPIONSHIP

“They are young kids, and i tell them not to believe what you read in the paper but they do.” N.C. State coach Chuck Amato on

� Cavalier Turnaround

P/G

X. Beitia, FSU

K

47

7.8

B. McMullen, UVa

WR

54

7.7

With 15 touchdown passes in its first seven games, Virginia has nearly doubled its passing offense from that of a year ago. Under first-year coach Al Groh, sophomore quarterbacks Matt Schaub and Bryson Spinner have tossed six and seven TDs respectively.

WHAT HIS PLAYERS’ DEALINGS WITH THE MEDIA Blum .

, '

He Yafei Minister, Deputy Chief of Mission Chinese Embassy in the U.S.

Will deliver a speech on

Sino U.S. Relations -

Thursday, October 25, 2001

2:3opm Breedlove Room (204 Perkins Library) Duke University West Campus Sponsored by

Asian/Pacific Studies Institute

FREE AND OPEN TO THE PUBLIC

For more information please contact Asian/Pacific Studies Institute at 684-2604 or Paula Evans at paula@duke.edu.

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Jteynet&f Trie* Annual Halloween Reading Friday, 26 October, 7 p.m. m, ry


Classifieds

The Chronicle

ATTN: UNDERGRAD ECON MAJORS!

and hundreds of other Halloween costumes plus lots of accessories and sale costumes. Formal Wear Outlet, Daniel Boone Village, Hillsborough, 15 minutes from campus. For hours and info 6448243.

OPEN ADVISING HOURS For 2002 Spring Registration Monday October 22nd-Friday November 9th. Come by Room 134 SocSci during the following hours to receive your PIN and Faculty Advisor Assignment. Seniors expected first week; Juniors & Sophomores expected second & third weeks. Please bring your University Check Sheet or a Printout of your Academic History from the

SPRING PLAYWRITING COURSE Collaboration: Playwrights, Directors, Actors Lab

Any interested playwrights, directors, or actors should contact Professor Erin Wilson (erincress@aol.com) as soon as possible about registering for this spring course in Theater Studies. It focuses on the development of new works for the stage and will culminate in public readings in April. Playwrights must come to the first class with a first draft of either a one-act or full-length play.

system. ACES/SISS NO APPOINTMENT NECESSARY! Hours: Mondays: 9am- 12pm & 3pm-7pm Tuesdays: 9am-spm Wednesdays: 9am-12pm & 2:3opm-4:3opm Thursdays: 9am-spm Fridays: 9am-Ipm & 3pm-spm Watch for e-mails & flyer postings in SocSci for the most current hours. Advising will be handles through the EcoTeach Center in Room 134 Social Sciences

TICKETS ON SALE FOR ALL BROADWAY AT DUKE STAGE AND ON SHOWS: FOOTLOOSE, November 12; GAELIC STORM (Irish traditional and pub music), November 16; ANNIE GET YOUR GUN, December 1; BOYS CHOIR OF HARLEM. December 2; TITANIC. February 7; DIRTY DOZEN BRASS BAND (jazz), February 10; JIMMY BOSCH (salsa), February 28; CABARET, March 20; THE SECOND CITY (comedy). April 8; RAGTIME, April 17.

WORRY MUCH? Worry incessantly about what might go wrong? hard to enjoy life because nagging voice in your head is anticipating the next problem? Tense, anxious? Meet with other students and CAPS counselor to find better ways to cope. Call 660-1010 or come to 214 Page for information or screening interview. Free to students.

BERLINER ABEND Duke in Berlin & the Dept, of German cordially invite you to a Berliner Abend (Berlin Evening) of refreshment & entertainment Thurs., Oct. 25, 7 p.m. in the Shaefer Lounge, House (Language Dorm), Edens Quad presented by Prof. Monika Fiedler of Humboldt University, Berlin. Interested in applying for spring 2002? Applications are being accepted in the Office of Study Abroad, 2016 Campus Drive, 684-2174.

www.moneyforopinions.com

WELCOME PARENTS! Curious about study abroad at Duke? The Office of Study Abroad will give a special presentation titled, “Opportunities for Study Abroad”, Fri., Oct. 26, 10-11 a.m. in Von Canon, Bryan Center. You’re also encouraged to visit the study

Duke faculty seeking before-school care and transportation for two elementary school girls, 7:30 to 9:ooam M, Tu, Fri. Non-smoker, Must have transportation. Good pay for responsible individual. Call 490-4861 evenings.

abroad information table in the Bryan Center Lobby, Fri. from 9 to 5 & Sat. from 9 to noon. For further information, call the Office of Study Abroad, 6842174 or visit us at our new “home"— 2016 Campus Drive.

Attention! Dreaded school loans? Work from home. Full or Part-time Free infor$lOOO-$5OOO/month. mation booklet. 1-800-545-7271

1,2, and 3 bedroom apartments available for January 1 near East Campus. 416-0393.

Autos For Sale

Earn $l5-30/hr. 1994 Ford Thunderbird LX Coop. V 8 loaded. Great condition, well maintained. Aluminum wheels, alarm system, auto transmission. ) AM/FM cassette. Tinted windows, dual airbags, and power seats. Hunter green. 79,000 miles. $5500. Call 309-1304.

discounts for Duke students. Group discounts available. For prices and other info, check out the Duke University Union web site: www.union.duke.edu.

VERTICES

Business Opportunities

the Duke Journal of

Undergraduate Science and seeks original

Technology

research articles, science features, and essays. DEADLINE: 11/01/01 vertices@duke.edu

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Duke University Medical Center is recruiting healthy, 18-55 year-old non-smokers and non-smokeless tobacco users to participate in a research study to test the tolerability of low-dose oral nicotine. Eligible participants must not have used a tobacco product in the past month. Participants will be paid $25.00 for about one hour of time. Call Dr. Eric Westman's office at Erwin Square, Box 50. 2200 West Main St., Durham, NC, 27705 at (919)990-1120 to see if you are eli-

gible.

Earn Extra Cash. Get Free Eats! We are looking for sophomores to participate in a market research discussion group. If you have used QuickStudy® reference guides, or other study guides printed on laminated sheets, Contact Brandy at 1800-734-5662.

(Combinations accepted.) $l.OO extra per day for all Bold Words $1.50 extra per day for a Bold Heading

(maximum 15 spaces) $2.50 for 2 line heading $2.00 extra per day for Boxed Ad deadline 1 business day prior to publication by 12:00 noon payment Cash, Check, Duke IR, MC/VISAor Flex accepted (We cannot make change for cash payments.) 24 hour drop off location •101 W. Union Building or mail to: Chronicle Classifieds Box 90858, Durham, NC 27708 0858 fax to: 684-8295 phone orders: call (919) 684-3811 to place your ad. -

Visit the Classifieds Online! Call 684-3811 if you have any questions about classifieds, No refunds or cancellations after first insertion deadline.

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Have extra Blue/White tickets? I need 2! Will pay top $! Call Hannah 383-0283. Need 3 tickets to Blue/White game. Call Bridget 416-4946.

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Houses For Rent 1810 Albany close to DUKE. 3BR On 1 1/2BA fenced yard. Hillandale Golf Course. Quiet $BBO/mo 419neighborhood. 8850. 2 story, 2 bedroom, 11/2 bath townhome 5 mins, from campus. All appliances included. Pets negotiable. $BOO/month. 942-7631. 5, 6, and 7 bedroom houses near East Campus for ‘O2-‘O3 school year. Call 416-0393. For Rent: 3 Bedroom, 2 Bath, I level Townhouse. Fireplace, security system, ceiling fans, W/D connections. Minutes from Duke. Patio, Indoor/outdoor storage, pool. $B5O/month. Call 919-477-3149, leave message. Great Location. 113 St. Paul off Roxboro Rd. 2nd house, behind Dunkin Donuts. 3BR Remodeled Energy Efficient. $975.00. 4898349(h) or 493-3983(w). -

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Houses For Sale Great starter home or investment property. Immaculate 2 bedroom 2 bathroom home in established southwest Durham neighborhood. 5 minutes to Duke. Large lot. $124,900. 1609 Valley Run. Open Sunday 2-spm. 489-2348.

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company, Award-Winning Customer Service! (see website) #3 Free meal Plans! (earlybirds) #4 All Destinations! #5 Campus Reps earn ss, Travel Free! Enough Reasons? 1-800-367-1252 www.springbreakdirect.com

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Work-study student to work as office assistant in the Office of Research Support, 15-20 hrs. per week, filing, typing, clerical and general office duties. Flexible 5:00 p.m., hours, 8:30 a.m. Monday-Friday, beginning immediately. $7.75 hr. Contact Judy Cox @ 684-3030.

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Sports

PAGE 16 �THURSDAY. OCTOBER 25. 2001

The Chronicle

Melchionni will redshirt next year N.C. State warned for bad language

� MELCHIONNI from page 11 made him grow accustomed to being the focal point of a team, Lee will need to adjust into his new role of wearing a suit to the arena. Nevertheless, the reasons for his sitting out a year are numerous. From a strict basketball perspective, most pundits agree that his year on the sidelines will allow Melchionni the time to mature physically so that his less-developed 6-7 frame can grow into itself. Even Jim Fenerty, his basketball coach at Germantown (PA) Academy welcomes the situation. “For Lee’s development, the redshirt is probably a good thing since he’s such a young senior this year,” he said. “The choice will leave him in good stead overall within the program.”

Also, with Duke’s obtaining six high-quality recruits for the Class of 2006, no space remained on the roster for Melchionni. Gary Melchionni obviously has a different perspective on his son’s sitting out a year. “I don’t think there are any negatives to his redshirting, except for the one my wallet is going to take,” he said half-jokingly, because fathers can only halfjoke when it comes to finances. “Academically, it will work out great. He could be taking grad courses by his third or fourth season if that’s what he chooses.” And when Lee does suit up for the first time in the fall of 2003, he will share the court with people he actively recruited. Upon accepting his offer from Duke, Lee started selling the program to other potential recruits like Shavlik Randolph and Shelden Williams, and now the Blue Devils have what is being deemed as one of the best classes in NCAA history. “I sent out e-mails, I instant messaged them, I called them,” Melchionni said without pretense. “I just wanted to talk up Duke. I think it helped a little, but I don’t want to take credit for developing this recruiting class or anything.” Due recognition or not for his marketing skills, Lee has secured his spot on a team comprised both of

'

CAREER HIGHLIGHTS � Averaged 17 points and nine rebounds per game during bis junior season at Germantown Academy. � Led his team to 27 wins last season—a school record—and a league title. � Competed In the adidas ABCD camp and NBA Players Association camp last summer.

g

There are worse things In the world than having to spend five years at Duke. Gary Meichionni -

men with whom he has already developed strong bonds offriendship and who possess unconscionable physical talent. Playing alongside his new classmates, Meichionni will move from one family to another, but the transition appears to be so seamless that one gets the impression that both of them really meant the same thing to him all along.

E

S

An Interdisciplinary Certificate Program at Duke University

NEW FINANCE COURSE SPRING 2002 MMS 85, Financial Management MW 5:30 6:45 p.m. Instructor, Sam Veraldi, Visiting Associate Professor, Markets & Management Studies Covers the principles of corporate finance. Students will be exposed to 1) concepts and processes involved in; ratio analysis, capital structure, interest rates, debt/equity, risk and return, tax laws, equity markets, break-even analysis, cost of capital, proforma statements, capital budgeting, planning forecasts, current asset management, valuation, mergers and acquisitions and time value of money; 2) techniques used to generate financial statements; 3) functions, technology and techniques of financial management; and 4) interpretation of financial data for use in making effective financial decisions. This is an introductory course and will not count for the M&M Certificate. Not open to first year students. This course is a pre-requisite to two new 100 level elective courses in the M&M curriculum: “Entrepreneurial Opportunities and Finance” and “Strategic Financial Management.” -

|

-

JVlarkets QLJWtanagemen t I

WHAT THEY SAID

Once everyone realizes that Meichionni Is a complimentary guy maybe they’ll start appreciating his strengths. On a good team, with kids who understand the game, Meichionni can be a great asset. Recruiting analyst Dave Telep

n

STUD

� WOMEN’S SOCCER from page 11 Certainly the contest’s intensity reflected its dire importance. Both sides challenged one another with reckless abandon as the fouls quickly piled up. The grudge match also featured a running dialogue, as coaches and players alike vocalized their frustrations. Late in the contest, both teams’ competitive fires burned brightly. Duke assis-

tant coach Carla Overbeck received a yellow card for arguing with the head official, and numerous N.C. State players were warned for the use oflanguage as they vehemently protested foul calls. Oxenham drew many of the linesmen’s disputed decisions. Her speed and deft maneuvering along the right wing repeat- Qar | a Overbeck opposing victimized edly defenders, who in turn were left clutching at her jersey. Despite being repeatedly knocked to the ground, the stoic Oxenham remained quiet, in marked contrast to the N.C. State players’ vigorous but unproductive objections. Reminded of such verbal objections after the match’s conclusion, a weary Oxenham offered a wry grin as she savored her team’s victory. “It was the kind of game I like,” she said. “It was very physical, and there was a lot of trash talking. That makes life interesting.”

Duke 1, N.C. State 0 FINAL

1 1

Duke (6-8, 1-5) N.C. State (7-7, 0-5)

0

2 0 0

F 1 0

GOALS: Duke-Fuller 18:25 SHOTS; Duke 7, N.C. State 7 SAVES: Duke 4 (Helgadottir), N.C. State 1 (Gomez) Stadium: WRAL Soccer Complex

Duke in Berfin The Department of German &

cordiady

BerCiner

invite you to attend a

Abend(BerCinEvening)

with refreshments

&

entertainment

presented by Monika Fiedfer, HumhoCdt University, Berlin Thursday, October 25, 7y.m., The Lounye, Shaefer House (Lanyuaye Dorm) Edens Quad

Spring 2002 applications are available in the Office of Study Abroad, 2016 Campus Drive, 684-2174


Comics

The Chronicle

THURSDAY, OCTOBER 25, 2001 � PAGE

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47 Segment of history

48 "Peanuts" regular 49 Force from

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12 Oafs 13 Feeling of

apprehension

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25 Israeli airline 26 Like some football player's 27 28 31 33 34 36 37

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40 Former capital of Scotland 42 Burdens

44 Cowboy, at times 45 Elevator stop 46 Crest 49 Give the boot 50 Far-reaching

51 New York state canal 52 Thomas Arne's Britannia" 53 Capital of *

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54 Disengage from a habit gai pan 56 Moo

The Chronicle chronicle dressing faux-pas: dave’s smelly sandals: kevin’s undershirts: jim’s haiwaiian luau shirt: that grey sweater ambika wears:

FoxTrot/ Bill Amend SECURE CONNECTION TO THE INTERNET. AYE-

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TRASH.

AWAY, SiR.

drew, thad, and jane roz and jenny jen wlach thad’s beard: martin’s hair gel: .mary, thad, allison, craig, teekx3 roily doesn’t commit faux-pas:.... roily Monica Franklin, Dawn Hall, Yu-hsien Huang, Matt Epley Account Assistant: Lucy DePree, Constance Lindsay Sales Representatives Kate Burgess, David Chen, Melissa Eckerman Creative Services Rachel Claremon, Cecilia Davit, Laura Durity, Lina Fenequito, Megan Harris, Dan Librot Business Assistants Thushara Corea, Preeti Garg, Ellen Mielke, Veronica Puente-Duany Classifieds .Courtney Botts, Seth Strickland, Emily Weiss

Calendar The North Carolina Returned Peace Corps , prospective

Freewater

Films:

with Hepburn, William Holden. Tickets are free to Duke students, $4 for Duke employees, and $5 for all others. For information, call 6842911. 7:00, 9:30 pm. Griffith Film Theater, Bryan Center, West Campus. “Sabrina,”

Humphrey Bogart, Audrey

Study and worship among 7:00 pm weekly, Duke Lounge. Open to all, Baptist Student Union for more informa-

(ISI) Basement at 7:30study geared towards Students, Inc

in Pe C Stu

re

ove

y> Du Institute. Free and

Hours: “R sity West ception ar an/Paciftc tant Prefer

Wesfey Fellowship is the campus ministry of the United Methodist Church, Rev. Jenny Copeland, campus minister. For information: 684-6735 or email jenny.copefand@duke.edu.

The Duke University Department of Music and Triangle Opera Great American Singers Series present a Quest Recital by Rockwell Blake, tenor. 8:00 pm, Baldwin Auditorium.


PAGE 18 �THURSDAY, OCTOBER 25.2001

The Chronicle Foreign student policy

In

the wake ofthe Sept. 11 terrorist attacks, many have looked for reforms to prevent the tragedies from occurring again. One such proposal seeks to improve the tracking of international students. Although the premise that a country should be able to know the general purpose for a foreign visitor’s presence in the country is acceptable, it is imperative that this plan not be executed hastily out of an emotional reaction to the tragedy. The initiative’s roots lie in a 1996 law that requires Immigration and Naturalization Services to establish by 2003 a general monitoring system on the institutions that foreign students are attending. Now, lawmakers are looking to accelerate its timetable. Unfortunately, the current law would burden foreign students with a $95 fee as part of obtaining their student visa. The fee looms unacceptably large to many students from poor countries that may have very weak currencies. Furthermore, few services provided by the government require a fee. Why should international students be treated any differently? Still, the overall system awaiting implementation seems prudent if it is used to make sure that international students truly are attending the institutions for which their visas were issued. A government has the right to place conditions on entry through its borders and ensure these conditions are met. In fact, the proposal merely makes the enforcement of already existing laws more efficient so that schools can notify INS when students have not been on campus. It also could allow better tracking of when those student visas expire. Still, the system could be perverted into an invasive tracker of movement, especially at a time when emotions run high. International students’ whereabouts should not be monitored in the fashion of shipping packages, and such excessive measures as mandatory fingerprinting are unnecessary. This system cannot be allowed to degrade into a sanctioned form ofracial profiling with millions of dollars allocated to its budget. Americans often trumpet the liberties afforded to them. The notion of needlessly curtailing the liberties of visitors to the United States should offend these sensibilities. However, if this system is only to provide better communication between INS and institutions of learning to ensure that students are attending their designated institution—the very reason student visas were issued to them by the US. —it is tolerable. The impetus for its rushed implementation is unfortunate, but a system with this directive enables better enforcement oflaws already on the books.

On

the record

They get ketchup only for fries. I do not let them use ketchup for my food. You use ketchup to cover up the taste of had food like a hamburger from McDonalds. You don’t use ketchup on good food that you get at my restaurant. Jihad Lubbad, owner of International Delights, on his restaurant’s ketchup policy (see story, page one)

The Chronicle AMBIKA KUMAR. Editor JAMES HERRIOTT, Managing Editor DAVE INGRAM, University Editor KEVIN LEES, University Editor JOHN BUSH, Editorial Page Editor CRAIG SAPERSTEIN, Sports Editor JONATHANANGIER, General Manager PRATIK PATEL, SeniorEditor

MARTIN BARNA, Projects Editor MATT ATWOOD, City & Slate Editor TIM PERZYK, Kecess Editor CHERAINE STANFORD, Features Editor MATT BRHMM. Health & Science Editor JENNIFER SONG, Health & Science Editor ELLEN MIKLKE, TowerView Editor PERI EDELSTEIN, TowerView Managing Editor PAUL DORAN, Sports Managing Editor DREW KLEIN, Sports Photography Editor EVAN DAVIS, Sr. Assoc. Sports Editor ROSALYN TANG, Graphics Editor WHITNEY BECKETT. Wire Editor DEAN CHAPMAN, Wire Editor MEG LAWSON, Sr. Assoc. City & Stale Editor REBECCA SUN, Sr. Assoc. City & Stale Editor MOLLY JACOBS, Sr. Assoc. Features Editor BECKY YOUNG. Sr. Assoc. Features Editor EDDIE GEISINGER, Sr. Assoc. Photography Editor ROBERT TAI, Sr. Assoc. Photography Editor ALAN HALACHMI, Online Manager ALISE EDWARDS, CreativeServices Manager SUE NEWSOME, Advertising Director ADRIENNE GRANT, Creative Director MARY WEAVER, Operations Manager CATHERINE MARTIN, Production Manager NALINI MILNE, Advertising Office Manager JORDANA JOFFE, Advertising Manager TOMMY STERNBERG Advertising Manager THAI) PARSONS, Photography

Editor

The Chronicle, circulation 16.000, is published by the Duke Student Publishing Company, Inc., a nonprofit corporation independent of Duke University. The opinions expressed in this newspaper are not necessarily those of Duke University, its students, workers, administration or trustees. Unsigned editorials represent the majority view of the editorial board. Columns, letters and cartoons represent the views of theauthors. To reach the Editorial Office (newsroom) at 301 Flowers Building, call 684-2663 or fax 684-46%. To reach the Business Office at 103 West Union Building, call 684-3811. To reach the Advertising Office at 101 West Union Building call 684-3811 or fax 684-8295. Visit The Chronicle Online at http://www.chronicle.duke.edu. © 2001 The Chronicle, Box 90858, Durham. N.C. 27708. All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced in any form without the prior, written permission of the Business Office. Each individual is entitled to one free copy.

Letters to the editor

Public policy department received unfair criticism I agree with part of John Zimmerman’s Oct. 11 column: The Sanford Institute of Public Policy is popular. The department is trend-setting, and the building is beautiful,

However, Zimmerman is also wrong. TTie Sanford Institute does offer courses which are relevant to everyday life. Have you ever seen a beer commercial on television? Have you ever read an article

Rep. David Price is on leave while serving his term in Washington, D.C. Zimmerman also cornplains about the types of skills that are taught in several of the core public policy courses. He says that these basic ideas are merely “useless pet projects.” Although it may not be immediately apparent, these skills are essential for understanding discussions in the elective PPS courses. I cannot think of any field where you can ignore the basics yet still appreciate the advanced topics. Furthermore, these fundamental issues taught at the Sanford Institute are relevant to a wide variety of

ic environment.” Although some professors in the department are liberal, this bias has not appeared in any of the numerous courses that I have taken. If anything, the political preferences of the professors create more interesting class discussions. Before you blindly believe anything that Zimmerman espouses, I encourage you to take a PPS course. The topics for Spring 2002 include “The policy conflicts surrounding the production of Broadway shows,” “The Administration of Justice in America” and “The United States role in international security.” Plus, after studying public policy, you may actually understand the true meaning behind all

about AIDS? Have you ever debated the merits of state lotteries? If you answered yes to any ofthese questions, then you may be interested in talking a PPS class. There are world-famous professors at the Sanford Institute who specialize in each of these topics as well as many oth- other majors and disciplines, Zimmerman Finally, ers. For instance, Jim Joseph is a former ambassador to argues that the public policy those beer commercials. South William department is a “bastion of Africa; Raspberry is a columnist at leftist politics” which proDave Dial The Washington Post; and duces an “unhealthy academTrinity ’O2 for referenced column, see http:! www.chronicle.duke.edu!story.phplarticle_id=23B22 /

Victory over conflicts includes exporting U.S. ideals Kelly Bowling’s Oct. 19 letter to the editor that suggests the United States is going too far in seeking to impose its ideals on the rest ofthe world is so far off base that it needs to be answered. One of our nation’s shortcomings has been its failure to seek to impose our ideals on

other nations over whom it has leverage. We may have no leverage over Osama bin Laden or Saddam Hussein, who use the Muslim faith like Adolf Hitler used Christianity, and we may have to handle them like we handled Hitler. However, we do have leverage over a number of friendly

for referenced

Muslim governments, and we need to encourage them to expand educational and economic opportunities and to move toward representative government as Turkey has. We also need to encourage the government to whom we give the most aid of all to stop shooting rock-throwing children, stop bulldozing houses, stop moving new settlers into areas that were reserved for Palestinians when Israel was

carved from their land and stop assassinating Palestinian leaders rather than capturing and trying them for misdeeds. The Palestinians have predictably responded with the assassination of an Israeli

leader and Israel has reciprocated with farther bloodshed and invasion of Palestinian territory. Since we have leverage with both Israel and nearby Muslim states, it is our duty to seek to impose our ideals and bring this madness is to a just end. Rather than curtail i Pur efforts to impose our ideals, we must commit ourselves to the export our ideals of liberty and justice to all nations, even to those nations we do not want to offend because of their petroleum or because of their status as our allies. Lawrence Davis School ofLaw ’63

letter, see http:! /www.chronicle.duke.edu / story.php?article_id=23B93

Laughs lost on new sophomore housing privileges I have been very pleased with the current developments concerning the unity of the soon-to-be sophomore class. Next year, the juniors and seniors will be sent to Trent and off campus so that the sophomores can be together. While this is an improvement, we are disappointed that this is all we can do to increase unity. First of all, what about registration? There is no reason that seniors should get first picks. This causes sophomores to be spread out in different classes, many of which were probably not even their first

choice. Why should seniors hog the classes? They’ve been here three years already, and if they haven’t taken a class they need, then tough luck.

But why stop there? Sophomores should be together all the time. We’ve noticed that at many Duke basketball games, sophomores are dispersed randomly throughout the crowd. You might find, for example, that two groups of sophomores are separated by a group of juniors, or worse, seniors. Obviously, sophomores should get let into the game first. Maybe we could reserve the first two rows in the student section, or better yet, behind the Duke bench. It could be “Main West Seating.” And sophomores need a way to identify each other. Just walking around campus, with all these non-sophomores, it can be difficult to tell who is one of the few. Freshmen, juniors and seniors

should be required to wear red armbands. This would make it easier to give preferential service at the campus eateries, better grades in classes and nicer haircuts at the Duke Barber Shop. It’s about time that we did something about this problem. Sophomores of Duke, unite! Demand the privileges that are rightfully yours. Let the tyranny of sophomore class fragmentation finally be overthrown. Tryg Dolber Trinity ’O3

SOORAJ BHAT Trinity ’O3

Alex Hooper Pratt ’O3

Correction The editorial in Wednesday’s edition should have read: “At least one bartender and one student owner have admitted that had Litt not taken up to $20,000 illegally something he should have realized he could not get away with—the bar would have remained open this year”


Commentary

The Chronicle

THURSDAY, OCTOBER 25,2001

4PAGE 19

Fear of flying One bad flyer’s fears augmented by Sept. 11 attacks I have never been a good flyer. Between my bad sinuses and my overactive imagination, flying has always been both physically and psychologically mmmßk trying—particularly since the airlines seem to enjoy showing such airplane-appropriate movies as Armageddon Laura and Air Force One when

I fly. But I always man-

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walk down the gangway onto the plane. For me, as I expect for many of you, that moment came over fall break, when my fiance and I flew out to visit his family in New Mexico. There’s no really good way to get to New Mexico except by air, unless you really, really like the boredom of taking 1,500 miles of Interstate 40 (no stoplights from here to Santa Fe!). Not flying is a victory for the terrorists, of course: The point of terror is to terrify. I know the airplanes are probably safer right now than they ever have been, I know the next attack will not come in the same way. Still, that doesn’t change the fact that right now, I am terribly frightened of getting on a plane. I didn’t sleep well the night before, and I wondered if I could ask a doctor for a sedative or something to relax me on the plane, and if they would prescribe it. I tried to pick magazines for the flight with nothing at all about Sept. 11th in them—which finally proved to be impossible, so I went with a romance novel instead. I worried a lot about the physics of flight, and whether they really, really worked (there are reasons I did not major in science). I wondered how the pilot felt, and if he was nervous. I wished Raleigh-Durham International Airport were a little further away from D.C. I wished that we could fly direct instead of changing planes in St. Louis and having to go through the take-off/landing/boarding stuff a whole extra time. I wished that everyone else on the plane

aged to get on that little silver tube, attempting to hold my imagination firmly in check and doping my poor sinuses up as much as possible. After Sept. 11,1 wasn’t sure I could anymore. It was all my worst nightmares come to life, my most horrible imaginings given flesh. How could anyone get on a plane again after seeing how fragile they were? How could I possibly give that much control of my life into the hands of someone else? It was terrifying enough when I was just sitting at 30,000 feet in a piece of metal, when, as everyone knows, metal is clearly not lighter than air. (Metal also sinks in water, hence my strong dislike for boats.) But how could I possibly go up in the air again now that my nightmares have faces? Now that my worst imaginings have been immortalized with news footage? For law students, it’s our interview season, which means (hopefully) that eventually some law firm will like us enough to fly us to its main office to interview on site. For all of us, the holiday season is fast approaching, and would be a pleasant-looking young while driving home between semesters mother flying with children, or else a for the December holidays may be pracnun in full regalia with spare rosaries tical if you live on this side of the for nervous passengers. Well, the pilot looked cheerful, the home for Mississippi, driving Thanksgiving really isn’t. So too many laws of physics remained firmly in of us are faced with this moment, far too place, Raleigh-Durham stayed put, the soon, when we have to swallow hard and romance novel was surprisingly enter-

taining, and the passengers were wellbehaved, despite the lack of nuns. The first flight was scary (and my fiance has the fingernail marks in his arm to prove it), but the sec-

the one perfect moment when you lift into the air and realize that yes, human beings can fly! I know that’s what Wilbur Wright felt, when the

wind caught the sails gS a d ‘j 1? 6 his J froze as he realized he was actually in the air. p J I wasn’t looking for air again. on COUTS6 There is one perfect and I was too terrified moment in every flight, to notice it anyway. But regardless of the airplane, the time of when we took off again from St. Louis, day or where you sit. There is one I felt it. The one perfect moment. It moment where the plane is roaring was still there. A great deal of our innocence has down the runway at incredible speed and the wings have just caught the air, been stolen. But there is still magic in and you can feel —for just the breath of the world. There is still hope. And there an instant —suspended between earth is still that one perfect moment when and sky, while the wheels are still on the world falls away and humanity once the ground and the wings are lifting more takes flight, you to the sky. It thril s me, delights me, every Laura Petelle is a student in the Divinity time. To mi i, that is the magic of flight, School and in the School ofLaw.

ond one felt much more normal, once I was over psychological the hump of getting in the

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Fearing the worst, hoping for the best trouble than we expect. It doesn’t require funding or piranha amidst the school of angry fish. It is the (contraining camps to chip away at the thin glue of security siderably high) risk posed by a mass gathering like that holds Western society together—if there’s a will, Super Bowl that we have to discuss and come to terms there are no limit to the ways. I imagine how any man with. It is the distinction between liberty and convenarmed only with a makeshift turban and a harmless ience that we have to establish, Ah, but how is it possible to have a “healthy amount” aerosol can would bring fear-crazed chaos to 70,000 football fans amidst hundreds of live cameras. I imagine of fear? The slope that leads down from caution to parahow a computer hack in the wee morning hours could noia and into the dark pit of schizophrenia is steep and bring a major city to its knees by shutting off power, slick. Despite the scenarios I imagined above, the worst water and communications, and then kick it while its damage that we will sustain will be self-inflicted, as our down with even a few small, well-placed explosions. If I fragile resolve gradually crumbles out from underneath can imagine all this out offear for my country, just think us. There is no enemy to vanquish; this struggle will be of the monstrous brainchildren to be borne of anyone fought in our own minds. It will be fought in the cultural consciousness of the media, as it waffles wildly with the infinitely more potent inspiration ofhate. Dad didn’t like my last column, in which I imagined between the spirit-deadening extremes of hyper-sensitive censorship and exploitative fearthe steps it would take to bring us to in our mongenng. state. J It will be Kfought a police He said, rather disin- j rprhiir a genuously, that it was ‘too apocalyp- 11 uucjil 1 cquu cj ui iuu ig own subconscious, as any unattendtic;’ he wasn’t alone, either. But selfand stubborn, obdurate blindness? prsiinirur rnmhc tn rhih ed bag will scatter people as would a i,uu Ul L Ul iU U F ticking bomb and any swarthy man for is <S LUII potentialMaybe its easier me to conjecture wildly, being censorship in the media separated from my country by an ocean. There was ly even more damaging to the flow nai)n nt rrhjp nf will come to be seen as a threat, ul lii c uj Our country is being given a test nothing but my imagination for cold comfort when I of information than sensationalcharacter and morale To Para it more than of happens logged on in Amsterdam one night to'see that, between ism—and c pruritv JCLUI liy that ULUL hnldc lUtuo phrase the unlikely source of Liz a visit to Duke and subsequent death in South Florida, you'd suspect, probably to sources us like a P ll bull in that you read every day. Better that W/nctoryi tnrrpthpr Phair> they P the first anthrax victim had both my home bases covWcoLe.i/t oULLCiy iUgcULCI. So a basement. we lock our doors at in get and when issues raised I do life-or-death ered. My insomnia has raged in result, night and imagine the worst case sleep I always have this nightmare: I am trapped, tones of near-hysteria than never along with all my friends and family, in a solid river of raised at all. Us alarmists may bark or foam at the scenario, if only so that we’re not caught off guard cars stretching straight down Alligator Alley—one of mouth, but this country cannot afford any longer to pass again. But don’t let fear dominate our daily (and nightthe only two roads out of that swampy death trap blindly by its own weak spots just because it makes us ly) lives, or we’ll all end up nerve-frayed insomniacs like myself. Temper our hatred with peace. called Florida. There is no sound save for the dull uncomfortable to confront them directly. hesitate use But Dad, I’m not kidding about that boat. I we are indeed at war—and to such If thudding of rotted cattle carcasses which drop from a crude and misleading label for our current situathe sky onto the sea of metal and glass. I sometimes think that if al-Qaida has even half of tion—then it is not the air strikes on the Taliban that Greg Bloom is a Trinity junior and special projects edimy sick powers of imagination, we’re all in a lot more should be holding our attention, for they are only one tor of Recess

The argument goes the same way every time: I, trying hard to sound rational, announce a new mandate for the safety of the family—ranging anywhere from “no more Dolphins games” to “buy a boat and be ready to sail out of Florida”—while my father dismisses any possibility that we could ever come to direct harm We’ll never resolve it because our perspectives are deadlocked opposites. For me, the worst case scenario is like a mangled car wreck on the side ofthe Greg highway that I can’t look away from; Bloom my father, on the other hand, stares straight ahead at the road—better for him not to even acknowledge the smoking rubble, because if it happened to them that means it could happen to him. Is it age, generational difference or something else that accounts for this frustrating gap between paranoia

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The Chronicle

PAGE 20 ďż˝ THURSDAY, OCTOBER 25, 2001

COPYRIGHT 2001. KROGER MID-ATLANTIC

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